Copyright | (c) 2013-2023 Brendan Hay |
---|---|
License | Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
Maintainer | Brendan Hay |
Stability | auto-generated |
Portability | non-portable (GHC extensions) |
Safe Haskell | Safe-Inferred |
Language | Haskell2010 |
Synopsis
- data ColorCorrector = ColorCorrector' {}
- newColorCorrector :: ColorCorrector
- colorCorrector_brightness :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural)
- colorCorrector_colorSpaceConversion :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe ColorSpaceConversion)
- colorCorrector_contrast :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural)
- colorCorrector_hdr10Metadata :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Hdr10Metadata)
- colorCorrector_hue :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Int)
- colorCorrector_sampleRangeConversion :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe SampleRangeConversion)
- colorCorrector_saturation :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural)
- colorCorrector_sdrReferenceWhiteLevel :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural)
Documentation
data ColorCorrector Source #
Settings for color correction.
See: newColorCorrector
smart constructor.
ColorCorrector' | |
|
Instances
newColorCorrector :: ColorCorrector Source #
Create a value of ColorCorrector
with all optional fields omitted.
Use generic-lens or optics to modify other optional fields.
The following record fields are available, with the corresponding lenses provided for backwards compatibility:
$sel:brightness:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_brightness
- Brightness level.
$sel:colorSpaceConversion:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_colorSpaceConversion
- Specify the color space you want for this output. The service supports
conversion between HDR formats, between SDR formats, from SDR to HDR,
and from HDR to SDR. SDR to HDR conversion doesn't upgrade the dynamic
range. The converted video has an HDR format, but visually appears the
same as an unconverted output. HDR to SDR conversion uses Elemental tone
mapping technology to approximate the outcome of manually regrading from
HDR to SDR. Select Force P3D65 (SDR) to set the output color space
metadata to the following: * Color primaries: Display P3 * Transfer
characteristics: SMPTE 428M * Matrix coefficients: BT.709
$sel:contrast:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_contrast
- Contrast level.
$sel:hdr10Metadata:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_hdr10Metadata
- Use these settings when you convert to the HDR 10 color space. Specify
the SMPTE ST 2086 Mastering Display Color Volume static metadata that
you want signaled in the output. These values don't affect the pixel
values that are encoded in the video stream. They are intended to help
the downstream video player display content in a way that reflects the
intentions of the the content creator. When you set Color space
conversion (ColorSpaceConversion) to HDR 10 (FORCE_HDR10), these
settings are required. You must set values for Max frame average light
level (maxFrameAverageLightLevel) and Max content light level
(maxContentLightLevel); these settings don't have a default value. The
default values for the other HDR 10 metadata settings are defined by the
P3D65 color space. For more information about MediaConvert HDR jobs, see
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/console/mediaconvert/hdr.
$sel:hue:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_hue
- Hue in degrees.
$sel:sampleRangeConversion:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_sampleRangeConversion
- Specify the video color sample range for this output. To create a full
range output, you must start with a full range YUV input and keep the
default value, None (NONE). To create a limited range output from a full
range input, choose Limited range (LIMITED_RANGE_SQUEEZE). With RGB
inputs, your output is always limited range, regardless of your choice
here. When you create a limited range output from a full range input,
MediaConvert limits the active pixel values in a way that depends on the
output's bit depth: 8-bit outputs contain only values from 16 through
235 and 10-bit outputs contain only values from 64 through 940. With
this conversion, MediaConvert also changes the output metadata to note
the limited range.
$sel:saturation:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_saturation
- Saturation level.
$sel:sdrReferenceWhiteLevel:ColorCorrector'
, colorCorrector_sdrReferenceWhiteLevel
- Specify the reference white level, in nits, for all of your SDR inputs.
Use to correct brightness levels within HDR10 outputs. The following
color metadata must be present in your SDR input: color primaries,
transfer characteristics, and matrix coefficients. If your SDR input has
missing color metadata, or if you want to correct input color metadata,
manually specify a color space in the input video selector. For 1,000
nit peak brightness displays, we recommend that you set SDR reference
white level to 203 (according to ITU-R BT.2408). Leave blank to use the
default value of 100, or specify an integer from 100 to 1000.
colorCorrector_brightness :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural) Source #
Brightness level.
colorCorrector_colorSpaceConversion :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe ColorSpaceConversion) Source #
Specify the color space you want for this output. The service supports conversion between HDR formats, between SDR formats, from SDR to HDR, and from HDR to SDR. SDR to HDR conversion doesn't upgrade the dynamic range. The converted video has an HDR format, but visually appears the same as an unconverted output. HDR to SDR conversion uses Elemental tone mapping technology to approximate the outcome of manually regrading from HDR to SDR. Select Force P3D65 (SDR) to set the output color space metadata to the following: * Color primaries: Display P3 * Transfer characteristics: SMPTE 428M * Matrix coefficients: BT.709
colorCorrector_contrast :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural) Source #
Contrast level.
colorCorrector_hdr10Metadata :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Hdr10Metadata) Source #
Use these settings when you convert to the HDR 10 color space. Specify the SMPTE ST 2086 Mastering Display Color Volume static metadata that you want signaled in the output. These values don't affect the pixel values that are encoded in the video stream. They are intended to help the downstream video player display content in a way that reflects the intentions of the the content creator. When you set Color space conversion (ColorSpaceConversion) to HDR 10 (FORCE_HDR10), these settings are required. You must set values for Max frame average light level (maxFrameAverageLightLevel) and Max content light level (maxContentLightLevel); these settings don't have a default value. The default values for the other HDR 10 metadata settings are defined by the P3D65 color space. For more information about MediaConvert HDR jobs, see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/console/mediaconvert/hdr.
colorCorrector_hue :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Int) Source #
Hue in degrees.
colorCorrector_sampleRangeConversion :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe SampleRangeConversion) Source #
Specify the video color sample range for this output. To create a full range output, you must start with a full range YUV input and keep the default value, None (NONE). To create a limited range output from a full range input, choose Limited range (LIMITED_RANGE_SQUEEZE). With RGB inputs, your output is always limited range, regardless of your choice here. When you create a limited range output from a full range input, MediaConvert limits the active pixel values in a way that depends on the output's bit depth: 8-bit outputs contain only values from 16 through 235 and 10-bit outputs contain only values from 64 through 940. With this conversion, MediaConvert also changes the output metadata to note the limited range.
colorCorrector_saturation :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural) Source #
Saturation level.
colorCorrector_sdrReferenceWhiteLevel :: Lens' ColorCorrector (Maybe Natural) Source #
Specify the reference white level, in nits, for all of your SDR inputs. Use to correct brightness levels within HDR10 outputs. The following color metadata must be present in your SDR input: color primaries, transfer characteristics, and matrix coefficients. If your SDR input has missing color metadata, or if you want to correct input color metadata, manually specify a color space in the input video selector. For 1,000 nit peak brightness displays, we recommend that you set SDR reference white level to 203 (according to ITU-R BT.2408). Leave blank to use the default value of 100, or specify an integer from 100 to 1000.